You guys are a bit warmer in the winter, -53C is pretty extreme even for us, normal winter day would be -20 / -25 ish. You'll survive. My first winter in Canada was rough, but you adapt. :P
Eh, you stop noticing after -30, it all feels the same. Just walk faster and limit exposure. It's awesome, because it's so dry you walk inside and are immediately warm. Not like Germany, a -10 and you can't get warm for days.
By Wayne Piekarski, Developer Advocate With the latest release of Android Wear, wearables with built-in GPS like the Sony Smartwatch 3 can now give you a GPS location update directly from the wearable, without a paired phone nearby. You can now build an app like MyTracks that lets a user track their run even when they leave their phone at home. For wearable devices that do not have built-in G…
here's the thing: compile(group: 'com.google.guava', name: 'guava', version: '14.0.+') i should be able to get syntax completion for guava code with that, right?
Of course, if your'e extending ActionBarActivity.... you're probably using ABS? In which case you need to extend the ABS Fragment instead, I think? I dunno. I haven't used it in ages.
why not two playing cards with a baseball on each... as if you were looking at them from the back. In this kind of an arrangement:
under that wording, i like the rest of that logo - i'm just worried that if those olive branchy thingies shrink to app-icon size the detail will be lost and it'll just look fuzzy
If my application has too many static variables or methods, then as per definition they will be stored in heap. Please correct me if I am wrong
1) Will these variables be on heap until application is closed?
2) Will they be available for GC at any time? If not can I say it is a memory leak?
I already made some Apps in Android and noticed that I am often using static methods.
For example I have an Class which extends PreferenceFragment. In this PreferenceFragment I set an onClick event on a Button.
Button btn = new Button(getActivity().getApplicationContext());
btn.setText(...
cM do you use one activity per fragment? I cheated on my most recent app, since it's not dual pane, i just have one activity that hosts my drawer, adn then swap fragments.
and no you don't need one activity per fragment, they are designed to be swapped around and have multiples per activity, otherwise just use an activity.
I don't see why those classes are implemented in such a way that the wrong way to use it is so simple
especially Handler
I'll be the first to admit I don't fully understand all of the rammifications, but wouldn't it have made more sense for them to build it to use the WeakReference implementation by default rather than what it is now which makes it easier to leak?
as it stands now it just seems like that is extra random boilerplate that you have to use if you want it to be "correct"